Feminist Ethics and In Vitro Fertilization

Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 13:264-284 (1987)
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Abstract

New technology in human reproduction has provoked wide ranging arguments about the desirability and moral justifiability of many of these efforts. Authors of biomedical ethics have ventured into the field to offer the insight of moral theory to these complex moral problems of contemporary life. I believe, however, that the moral theories most widely endorsed today are problematic and that a new approach to ethics is necessary if we are to address the concerns and perspectives identified by feminist theorists in our considerations of such topics. Hence, I propose to look at one particular technique in the growing repertoire of new reproductive technologies, in vitro fertilization, in order to consider the insight which the mainstream approaches to moral theory have offered to this debate, and to see the difference made by a feminist approach to ethics.

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reprint Sherwin, Susan (1987) "Feminist Ethics and In Vitro Fertilization". Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17(sup1):264-284

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Susan Sherwin
Dalhousie University

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